BrickJournal #36 Preview

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The Magazine for LEGO® Enthusiasts of All Ages! Issue 36 • September 2015

8.95

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in the US

EXCLUSIVE:

We Talk Ten Years with The LEGO Group’s CEO!

Creating a Microscale Hong Kong

Building Small with

Microscale Building A Talk with

Justin MacMillan

Creating Cathedrals

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Instructions and MORE!

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Issue 36 • September 2015

Contents

From the Editor....................................................2

People

Harry Nijenkamp & His Brick City...........4 Builder Brief: Justin MacMillan..............................................6 The View from the Top: 10 Years Later an interview with Jørgen Vig Knudstorp, CEO of the LEGO Group.........................12

Building

A Brief History of Microscale...................20 Creating a Microscale Hong Kong.....24 Creating Cathedrals: Notre Dam de Strasbourg and Notre Dame de Paris.................................30 Builder Brief: Jens Ohrndorf................................................33 Building a Bite-Sized Batcave.................40 Building the Micropolis Standard.......45 Microscale 101: Making Your Next Micro MOC Stand Out From the Crowd..................46 Builder Brief: Joe Miserendino...........................................50 It’s a Small,Small World...............................54 You Can Build It: MINI Phoenix Home (Pelta-class Frigate)......................................56 Minifigure Customization 101: Making Book Characters the Minifigure Way...............................................60 MINDSTORMS 101: My Blocks:The Basics.................................65

Community

Jakarta Brick City..............................................68 Community Ads..............................................78 Last Word..............................................................79


People

Justin MacMillan is a builder that specializes in microbuilding With only a few parts and elements, he manges to create buildings, homes and even vehicles. BrickJournal asked him to write about his building process and what inspires him to build. When I was a kid, every holiday represented a new opportunity to undermine anyone who had painstakingly wrapped a perfectly rectangular box by shaking it vigorously. I still remember the lightning rod of excitement that would shoot through me whenever I heard that unmistakable rattle. “This is a new LEGO set!” I would yell, immediately trying to rip the paper off to see the magic inside. My mom is good at wrapping gifts, so that would take some time. As I tore at taped paper corners that seemed like they would never end, my mind would race. A new Blacktron ship or rover to explore the outer reaches? Or, would it be something more terrestrial? Perhaps the latest Town set, like the awesome Coastal Rescue Base. Inside that Schrödinger’s moment, what was really inside the box didn’t matter. My excitement hinged on the possibilities in my imagination, and the promise of new spaces and shapes to explore; it was about creation itself. Fast forward twenty-something years, and I’m still shaking boxes. Today it is just a habit, since I almost always know exactly what sort of joy is inside.

Builder Brief:

Justin MacMillan Article by Justin MacMillan 6

My LEGO work is mostly small-scale architecture, and it is inspired by the places I’ve lived. Over the years I’ve called three coasts home. In my time moving from one side of the United States to the other, I have seen a lot of buildings and infrastructure. As a kid, my parents’ professions also exposed me to several building styles, while their approach to life allowed me to experience different cultures and a diverse set of experiences that would shape my vision and understanding of how different people live together on this little blue ball we collectively call home.


Growing up in the Northeast, catalog-perfect suburban neighborhoods housed hustlers who spent their days in glass skyscrapers. From pristine hedge-lined mansions bathed in silver summer sun along Long Island’s South Fork, to the row houses in rough-and-tumble industrial towns in central Massachusetts, I took it all in. I watched how snow stuck to peaked roofs in winter and learned to love the first sight of flowers in the spring. But I didn’t know much about summer until I moved to Texas.

Chateau House This model is a study of a building and its environment. Using just a handful of parts, a building and its grounds are sketched out with minimal detail.

In the south, low-slung ranch houses sprawl across multiacre spreads. Spanish oaks and mesquite trees dot the landscape all the way to a horizon that seems so far away. From agricultural landscapes to big city skylines that jut right out of the prairie and into an enormous sky, in Texas I saw a harmony with nature that was truly unique. Today I live in northern California, where you would have to work very hard not to be inspired by beauty both natural and man-made. Within a few hours I can drive from a beach to a forest, from the city to the desert, and then cross back over mountains that are blanketed in fog every night. Nature here demands respect. The architectural styles must incorporate earthquake and fire safety. In San Francisco, skyscrapers are a bit lower than in other cities, but they are no less iconic than their more massive counterparts in sister-cities around the world. In Silicon Valley, vast office complexes sprawl from block to block, housing enough amenities to fuel kids in hoodies who build more Internet for the rest of us. Out here, design is not a simple function of aesthetics. It is critical for people to live. On the West Coast the pioneering spirit plays itself out over complex geography and across a multitude of building styles, which mirror the very diversity of Californians themselves. My work strives to represent what I see, and to convey how impactful the shapes around us are to our most fundamental human experiences. My focus on the smaller scales of LEGO design, particularly microscale, stems from my reductionist process and my minimalist values. When creating a new model, I aim to

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The View from the Top... 10 Years Later An Interview with Jørgen Vig Knudstorp, CEO of The LEGO Group Article by Geoff Gray In the summer of 2005, at George Mason University outside Washington DC, a few hundred AFOLs gathered for BrickFest, the largest AFOL convention in the US at that time. Also present were the owner of the LEGO Group (Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen) and the new CEO (Jørgen Vig Knudstorp). During a packed session, I had the opportunity to bring Joe Meno up to the stage and present to him a printed copy of BrickJournal Magazine, Volume 1, Issue 1. The particular copy was very unique because it had been autographed by Kjeld and Jørgen. But it was even more special because it was the very first copy of the magazine that had ever been printed. When Joe was presented with the copy, he received a standing ovation for the work he had done to make the magazine possible (see the sidebar entitled “View from the Sidelines: How BrickJournal Came to Be.”). Later that day, I spoke with Jørgen and asked if we could do an interview with him for a future issue. He graciously agreed. We released the article “A View from the Top” in Volume 1, Issue 3, December 2005. Since then I have conducted five other interviews with Jørgen for the magazine. For our 10th anniversary, I wanted to revisit some of the old interviews and see how things have changed, as well as what things have not changed. As always, Jørgen was very accommodating with his time. BrickJournal: Welcome back Jørgen. Looking back over the last 10 years, it has been an exciting ride for both companies. In 2005 The LEGO Group was starting to recover from several years of losses and the possibility of being broken up and sold. At the same time, BrickJournal was just starting as a fan-run online magazine with no idea if we could succeed. Ten years later, The LEGO Group is at least seven times larger than it was and BrickJournal has become a print-based magazine that is successful enough for the Editor in Chief/Owner to have this as his only job. What are some of the highlights and lowlights for you in particular during this time? JVK: It’s been an incredible journey, and I have learned so much and had so much “hard fun.” The highlight is clearly how the LEGO Idea based on the LEGO Brick and the system-in-play has been revitalized and shown to have enduring appeal, and also ever broader appeal. We know Opposite: Staff photo of Jørgen Vig Knudstorp.

now with a strong basis in neuroscience and our many activities in the LEGO Foundation that play and learning through play are not only powerful ways of developing the whole human being, but perhaps the most effective way to develop. I have come to appreciate that next to love, food and health—play is the most important factor in childhood. The development through childhood irreversibly impacts that rest of our lives as human beings, so we are talking about something very critical here.

“I have come to appreciate that next to love, food and health—play is the most important factor in childhood. “ It has surprised me how well the company is doing and how strongly it is growing, and it a testament to the strength of the LEGO Idea but also to my many colleagues’ playfulness and creativity. Today, I get a lot of credit for the Group’s development. However, most of the fantastic things that have happened were not my idea; some were here before I arrived in 2001, and others were developed by great colleagues who didn’t even ask for my permission to pursue them. This is something that makes me proud to be a LEGO person and a leader of the pack of LEGO people. There are actually very few low lights. I cannot think of anything that I regret or spent energy on wishing it had been different. Obviously, a lot of mistakes have been made and I take that as part of learning and experimentation. There are a lot of things that I wish I could have done earlier or faster. But such is life. When you look ahead it is daunting, yet in hindsight it seems like you should have acted faster because of course now you know what to do.

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Building

Some of the initial LEGO sets, with small-scale figures and cars.

A Brief History of Microscale Article by Ashley Glennon

Microscale building is the art of creating tiny models that contain the detail and realism one might expect from a much larger creation. In its broadest definition, microscale building means any creation smaller than minifigure scale where, frequently, a cylinder brick is assumed to be about the size of a person. For this reason many AFOLs originally called microscale building, “microfig” scale. But like so many other LEGO themes, the popularity and definition of microscale has exploded and folks from around the world are now building models in nano and pico scales. For the sake of this article, though, we will call everything smaller than a minifig, “microscale” I mentioned that microscale has been around since the beginning, so let’s take a brief look at its history. One could argue that microscale building was born back in 1949 when Automatic Binding (LEGO) Bricks were introduced. The structures depicted on the earliest boxes were frequently smaller than minifig scale and were mostly buildings and towers. By the mid-1950s microscale was in full swing! Nearly all the sets during the 1950s depicted creations smaller than minifig scale, and some sets included plastic cars manufactured by the LEGO Company. These plastic cars were approximately HO (1:87) scale and are highly sought by collectors. Throughout the 1960s and early 1970s, dozens of small scale sets were released. As new parts were introduced, the level of micro detail was improving dramatically. Townscapes, ships, airplanes, buildings… nearly everything was micro-sized! But suddenly everything changed.

A Homemaker set, which was first to introduce figures into the LEGO bricks.

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By the mid 1970s the LEGO Company began producing LEGO people (set 200 is a good example) and armless minifigures were produced as well (set 770 was my favorite from the era). Suddenly there was an implied scale, and it was surprisingly much larger than everything from the previous twenty years.


Building

Creating a Microscale Hong Kong Article by Jared Chan

Jared Chan’s landscape of Hong Kong, which includes: • Bank of China Building • Former Central Government Offices • HSBC Main Building • Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong • Prince’s Building • Standard Chartered Bank Building • Statue Square Also displayed are the following Declared Monuments of Hong Kong: • Former French Mission Building* • Old Supreme Court Building* • St. John’s Cathedral* • The Cenotaph*

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The idea was simple—to recreate the landmarks on both sides of Hong Kong’s renowned Victoria Harbour for permanent display in the shop. Wow! I jumped at the opportunity and volunteered for building HSBC Main Building, which I had wanted to build for ages after Legend Bricks completed a scale model of the entire Tsim Sha Tsui district of Hong Kong in 2012 (https://www.flickr.com/photos/ jaredchan/7182279934). I replicated four buildings in LEGO form for the renovation project: HSBC Main Building, Standard Chartered Bank Building, Central Plaza and CITIC Tower, but I just couldn’t stop at that because it was so much fun! So I decided to build an improved version of HSBC Main Building and a layout of the most important section of central Hong Kong. The layout was in 1:265 scale, which was largely the same as the Tsim Sha Tsui project. Construction took approximately 3 months and countless bricks. While the layout was merely 96 x 240 studs, it covered Hong Kong’s former Central Government Offices, the current/former headquarters of Hong Kong’s only three note-issuing banks, as well as three of old Hong Kong’s key judicial, legislative and religious buildings, which were declared monuments of the city. All these different buildings vary in architectural style yet they look really good when put together; I guess this is what makes Hong Kong special.

Prince Building and Statue Square seen from HSBC building roof. Statue Square. A tram making its rounds.

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Building Creating Cathedrals:

Notre Dame de Strasbourg and Notre Dame de Paris by Daniel Stoeffler (DanSto on Flickr)

As a French AFOL born in Strasbourg but living outside the town, I was always fascinated by its cathedral each time I went back to the city. This cathedral is very impressive with its detailed facade and its very characteristic unique tower making it the highest remaining middle age building (it was the tallest in the world from 1647 to 1874).

A couple of views of Dan’s Notre Dame de Strasbourg.

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In December 2012, a movie devoted to the history of the build of Notre Dame de Strasbourg was shown at the ARTE TV channel (http:// cathedrale.arte.tv/le-film.php) displaying detailed 3D models of the cathedral. This movie was the beginning of my Architecture-like project which I finished in September 2013 (http://www.eurobricks.com/ forum/index.php?showtopic=87065). The model, built with 1350 parts, depicts the cathedral between 19451991, before the reconstruction of the transept tower.


Building

One Penn Plaza, New York City

Merchants Tower 01 Shanghai

Builder Brief: Jens Ohrndorf -

My name is Jens Ohrndorf, I’m 42 years old and I live next to Karlsruhe (Germany). My daily occupation is to teach young people in the fields of sports, technology, music and computer science. I’m interested in architecture, graphic design, music, sports, the Web, and for over 5 years I’m primarily concerned with building LEGO models in my free time.

Micro Builder, Micro Modular Builder! Article by Jens Ohrndorf

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Find more LEGO work of Jens Ohrndorf (alias moctown) here: https://www.flickr. com/photos/moctown/ or by scanning the QR code!

At the moment I’m working on a freestyle model (no original one for it) which consists of round about 3.500 pieces, and of course—it’s microscale! Jens Ohrndorf is a founding member of the charitable registered association Schwabenstein 2x4, founded 2015 in Stuttgart (Germany). Facebook page: www.facebook.com/schwabenstein2x4

Micro Modulars Inspired by the Mini Modular (#10230) set that was released in 2011, one of Jens’ specialties has been building microscale modular buildings. Here are some of his buildings, both in a layout and also separate. Public Library.

Green Apple Store.

Blue Avenue #7.

Public Library rear.

Green Apple Store rear.

Blue Avenue #7 rear.

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Building

The Batcave Playset.

Building a Bite-Sized Batcave! Article by Matthew Hocker

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Riddle me this, riddle me that… how shall I build a small but fun bat? This is the question I asked myself while building my latest MOC, a microscale Batcave playset. When I was a child, a collection of Batman action figures was among my favorite toys. I loved them because they had a diverse range of hidden surprises and play features. This nostalgia inspired me to create a Batcave that would be both detailed and fun for children to play with. Just like any superhero, this MOC has a unique origin story. Back in April I was visiting my brother, and he invited me to build together with his collection. I was dealing with a case of “builder’s block” until he mentioned wanting to build a minifig scale Batmobile. Right then and there, I decided to make a microscale Batmobile!

It’s the Car...

Having grown up with Tim Burton’s Batman (1989) and Batman Returns (1992), I wanted the finished model to resemble the Batmobile from those films. The original vehicle is famous for its swooping curves and fins, a design element that proved to be the most challenging to replicate at such a small scale. Could it be done?


Building

Microscale 101:

Making Your Next Micro MOC Stand Out From the Crowd Article by John Stephens

Building in microscale can be a daunting task for first-timers. The thought process about parts selection is quite the departure from building in minifigure scale and above. What was once a telescope is now a tree trunk. A droid head is the bridge of a starship. A wagon wheel now represents a water wheel for a riverside mill. The possibilities are often elusive to newcomers, because building at this scale also means you are limited in terms of part selection, so using uncommon or unorthodox techniques and connections is often your best bet to retain detail and functionality at a small scale. Here’s a selection of my favorite parts, techniques, and connections to help you get the most out of your next microbuild.

Connection: Tile in Clip

Once considered an “illegal” connection, it has recently been implemented by The LEGO Group in the UCS SHIELD Helicarrier set. It’s a bit finicky, but is a great choice for adding extra detail and can be used in multiple themes. When replicating a model from existing source material, it’s important at this scale to ensure that details which would make the model instantly recognizable are included. For my Star Wars T-47 airspeeder, one such feature is the airbrakes so prominently displayed during flight scenes in the movie. Using a 1x1 tile inserted into a 1x1 Modified Tile w/Clip easily achieves this look, and adds an extra layer of accuracy to the model.

But this technique isn’t just used for details on spaceships. Here, I’ve used the same connection for a Micropolis build to generate a detailed fence around this apartment’s swimming pool. Instead of the 1x1 tile, here I’ve seated 1x2 grille tiles. This allows me to include much more detail than if I had opted for standard 1x2 or 1x4 panel elements. Not only do you get the detail from the grill tile itself, but the repetition of the modified tile’s clip also adds a great pattern.


Building

Builder Brief:

Joe Miserendino

Article by Joe Miserendino

Let me give you some background about myself. I’m a 55 year old LEGO fan who came out of his ‘dark ages’ with the release of the first UCS X-Wing back in 2000. I started collecting sets at that time but not building. I was content to collect and never gave ‘MOCing’ a thought. In 2009 I attended my first BrickFair event and met several people that helped push me into the world of true AFOLs—Brett Harris and Art Gugick. Brett pushed me to ‘just build something’ and Art helped spark an interest in microscale building. Further research into microbuilding led me to the TwinLUG Micropolis site and I was hooked— Micropolis became an obsession.

My first builds were limited in scope: a small office tower, a collection of shops and the like (seen above and left). My first large build (right) was a bit cringe-worthy and is no longer in existence; in hindsight it was a bit of overkill. During this time I discovered the Flickr Micropolis group and began studying what other builders were doing, looking at techniques and styles and refining my own.


While I’ve always liked building in a variety of scales, I’ve got a real soft spot for microscale. The way you can create huge scenes with relatively few bricks, or produce a cool little build from a handful of elements—it’s unlike any other kind of building.

Building

There’s a sense of the abstract to microscale, which doesn’t often show up in LEGO building. Most LEGO builders attempt to make things as “realistic” as possible, even when they’re building fantastical creations. Microscale is different. The levels of detail you can put into a model are relatively low. The results require interpretation—it’s not just the builder who has to look at their bricks in different ways, it also asks the viewer to look at LEGO differently. There’s something good about people having to decode your build a little— they look, and then something clicks, and suddenly they’re seeing a whole new world of what LEGO bricks can do. My microscale builds are always the ones which prompt the most conversation at shows, because they’re not what people immediately expect LEGO building to be. I love the challenge of looking at bricks in a different way, thinking about what they could represent if you imagine they’re massive. There’s nothing better than when you spot a new way to use something—the klaxons go off in your head: “NPU (New Part Use)! NPU!” and you’re away, fiddling with the bricks trying to use what you’ve just found. Kingdom in a Box.

It’s a Small, Small World! Article by Rod Gillies (TooMuchCaffeine)

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When you’re thinking about microscale, you have to look at your bricks—really look at them. All those tiny little knobs or grooves you’ve never paid attention to before can suddenly represent whole new levels of detail at a different scale. Minifig utensils and weapons can be a great source of greebley bits for adding richness and depth at small scales, and take a good look at Technic pieces too. Some of those unusual shapes can take on new life in a microscale world. Before you know it, minifig hair starts looking like trees, grill tiles become farm fences, and flippers are superhero capes. “Hold the Line at Bleaker Street.”

Dynamic Duo.


You Can Build It MINI Model

MINI Phoenix Home (Pelta-class Frigate) Design and Instructions by Christopher Deck Hello everybody and welcome back to our Mini Model building series! For the Star Wars fans among you, there is the Phoenix Home—a Pelta-class frigate—from the brand new second season of the Star Wars Rebels TV series that we want to build together in this fantastic issue of BrickJournal. The most difficult sections to build in this model are the sloped side extensions on both sides of the ship. But slopes are not only on both sides, but also on upper and under side! To keep the model in a miniature scale, we have to attach 2/3 slopes on both sides of a plate. But thin plate layers with studs on both sides are pretty rare, so we have to use a building trick to obtain the shape. When you reached steps 11 and 12 of the building instructions, you will notice that the underside slopes are just slid into the model from one side, and finally blocked by attaching the underside slopes from the opposite side. This works pretty well thanks to those fantastic 1x4 tiles with one stud on each end.

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Another tricky part of this particular design is the engine fins attached at the rear of the ship. They have a wedge shape and can fold into closed and open position according to the flight mode chosen. Instead of trying to find a most likely bulky solution, we simply elegantly add those special hinge pieces which fulfill all needs of functionality: wedge-shape, folding ability and left-over stud for engine attachment. With that, our model is finished! I wish you happy building and see you next time!

You can view Christopher’s webpage by going to www.deckdesigns.de or scanning this QR code!


Building Minifigure Customization 101

Ernest Cline and his minifigure.

I know that this issue is dedicated to scale and learning how to create in microscale, while this series is about minifigures, so it is hard to tackle. I am going to share my latest project pointing out how scale is important, and maybe showing a couple of microscale figure customizations. I hope everyone reading this article will have read the book by Ernest Cline, Ready Player One. If not, go read it; it is a great book. If you don’t have time to read, go listen to Wil Wheaton read it to you on the audiobook.

Making Book Characters the Minifigure Way! Article by Jared K. Burks

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I was approached by Glen Wadleigh about creating the High Five from the book for Brick Fiesta and got consumed by the Oasis and the hunt. I will show you what I have translated from the pages of Ernie’s book to minifigure form. Please know that there are no official reference images for these characters, no illustrations, nothing. I had only the text on the page to work from, so this is a work in translating what the author wrote and described into a physical creation. This can get tricky, but I found that my life experience (living through the era covered in the book, the 1980s) helped quite a bit. As it turns out I am only about one month older than Ernie, and he seemed to be writing about his childhood. So the figures I created are an interpretation of the ones in the book from my perspective. In order to explain how I created these figures, I have to give a bit of backstory on the book.


About Ready Player One from publisher Random House: In the year 2044, reality is an ugly place. The only time teenage Wade Watts really feels alive is when he’s jacked into the virtual utopia known as the OASIS. Wade’s devoted his life to studying the puzzles hidden within this world’s digital confines— puzzles that are based on their creator’s obsession with the pop culture of decades past, and that promise massive power and fortune to whoever can unlock them. But when Wade stumbles upon the first clue, he finds himself beset by players willing to kill to take this ultimate prize. The race is on, and if Wade’s going to survive, he’ll have to win—and confront the real world he’s always been so desperate to escape. Each of these characters becomes Halliday scholars, people who are experts on anything James Halliday liked, and James liked the 1980s. As a result, everything they immersed themselves in was a late ’70s to ’80s reference. This influences the whole book and (I thought) the character designs themselves. I also wanted to tie colors to the characters, as each is so unique I wanted to tie them closer to LEGO colors as well. So pay close attention to the color choices I made throughout the series. Let’s roll through a character list for the book and the descriptions used by Ernie.

Wade3

Wade Watts is attending high school online. He is poor, as is most of the world, and has no funds to travel or purchase anything in the OASIS beyond what his school or the OASIS have issued him. Wade3, because he is the third person with the first name Wade at his school, is described as being the default avatar settings, black t-shirt and blue jeans. I gave him a faded pair of high-top tennis shoes to complete the look and his eyes are actually more square than round to highlight that this is an avatar (online) style character.

Ernest Cline and his book characters in minifigure form.

Wade3.

Parzival

Parzival is Wade3’s Gunter alter ego. Gunters are Egg Hunters that are searching for the easter egg hidden in the OASIS by James Halliday the creator. Parzival and his friends are all solo Gunters, not part of a group or clan, which makes each of their outfits unique. When translating to LEGO, I wanted to highlight this, yet tie them to the brick. So I decided that the color Yellow would be Parzival’s main color. Wade chose the name Parzival due to the name’s heritage. Parzival is the grail knight that finds the Holy Grail in Arthurian legends. As such I had to give a historical nod to this influence and tried to do so with all the leather straps, but as this is a virtual place, I also made his basic “armor” an updated version of plate in style. From here I added the “27 pieces of flair” to make the character look traveled and lived in. As Parzival starts out with nothing, he keeps nearly everything and wants to mark where he has been, thus all of the badges on his basic armor. I also updated his face to look more natural (LEGO natural) and made his hair style different to denote stepping away from the default skin. I picked up influences from Tron with a light touch from Star Wars. Where I really had fun was all the accessories.

Parzival.

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My Blocks: What are they?

My Blocks are a way to represent lots of instructions with just a single block. What that means is that you may have a very long program, and just by the nature of such a large program it might be difficult to see at a glance what is happening within the code. My Blocks allow you to ‘chunk’ out the program into meaningful chunks that makes it easier to both program and more importantly debug. So what would that look like in a real program?

How Do We Use Them?

Let’s take an example of a dancing robot from a competition like RoboCup Junior. In this competition, robots need to do a performance for a set amount of time. A large number of teams break a song down into verse/chorus sections and then program the robot to do different actions in each section. Here is an example of Robot dance program as it might look the first time you work on it.

Building MINDSTORMS 101:

My Blocks: The Basics

Article and art by Damien Kee

That is starting to get quite large as there are lots of movements within the program. What would be nice is if we could take all the parts relating to the robot dancing to the first verse of the song and create a single block to represent this. Here’s how you place all the blocks into a My Block.

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Discover proposals for new LEGO® sets created by fans just like you! Upload your own idea, or support your favorites. Give feedback and share ideas with your friends so

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ideas.lego.com

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We’re looking for the next ® bright LEGO idea…


IF YOU ENJOYED THIS PREVIEW, CLICK THE LINK TO ORDER THIS ISSUE IN PRINT OR DIGITAL FORMAT!

BRICKJOURNAL #36

MICROSCALE BUILDING! With JUSTIN McMILLAN’s micro house and other buildings, a look at the MICROSCALE Standard by TwinLUG, and featuring some of the best microscopic LEGO work from around the world, plus JARED K. BURKS’ minifigure customizing, step-by-step “You Can Build It” instructions by CHRISTOPHER DECK, BrickNerd DIY Fan Art, MINDSTORMS robotics lessons by DAMIEN KEE, and more! (84-page FULL-COLOR magazine) $8.95 (Digital Edition) $3.95 http://twomorrows.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=133&products_id=1212

Article by Kosmas Santosa and Erwin and Charis Stella

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o many y,, Indonesia is actually home to Unbeknownst to quite a number of active AFOLs passionate in the creation RI 02&V 7KLV SDVVLRQ ÀQDOO\ VXUIDFHG WR WKH H\HV RI WKH ty y,, held from public in the event known as Jakarta Brick City June 6 to July 12 earlier this year. This event was created in y,, and was a result celebration of the city’s 488th anniversary of the collaboration between Emporium Pluit Mall and Bhinneka LUG. The display consisted of Jakarta’s famous buildings, landmarks, and city life in LEGO form, created by Indonesian MOCers from Bhinneka LUG. Bhinneka LUG started out back on the 29th of December 2013 as a group of friends and families that love to build and collect LEGO. The group quickly grew to become a MOC group as we found our passion in creating our own builds, inspired by amazing MOCs from around the world. W Wee held he monthly gatherings, exchanging


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